NOTICE: The following
article is written by the author itself and not by me, I am not trying to
violate their copyright. I will give some information on them. I chose this
article as the article on the death penalty of the week, because it is the
first anniversary of the 2012 Sandy Hook Elementary School Shooting.
PAGE
TITLE: http://www.policymic.com/
ARTICLE
TITLE:
Adam Lanza: If He Had Lived, Would Connecticut Rethink Its Death Penalty
Stance?
DATE: January 11, 2013
AUTHOR: Janna Brock
AUTHOR
INFORMATION: http://jannabrock17.policymic.com/
& http://freedomoutpost.com/author/jannabrock/
Remember
the Sandy Hook Elementary School shooting (PHOTO SOURCE: https://www.facebook.com/photo.php?fbid=614096131982070&set=a.449146001810418.103770.449143508477334&type=1&theater)
|
In
light of the James Holmes trial, it is hard not to think of Adam Lanza, and his
heinous shooting spree on December 14, which took the lives of 20 young students, and
six teachers. Lanza also killed his mother before going to the school.
Unlike Holmes, Lanza turned a gun on himself. Adam Lanza took the coward's way out, committing suicide
before first responders arrived. Had he lived, Lanza would most surely be
locked up, facing a long and arduous trial. But in Connecticut, there is
no death penalty, and where Holmes is facing trial in Colorado, the state does have
the death penalty. Would the Adam Lanza case change the thinking in a state
marred with some of the strictest gun laws in the country?
The
Adam Lanza shooting has people seeing red, blood red. This young man
forced his way into an elementary school, and took out his rage out on innocent
children. The 20 schoolchildren he killed were all ages 6 and 7, and sickeningly all 20 were shot more than
once. Lanza also callously gunned down Principal Dawn Hochsprung, as she
tried to tackle him, as well as first grade teacher Vicki Soto, who
courageously faced a hail of bullets while hiding her students in a closet. The
toll of this crime is unimaginable. One month later, it is still impossible to
contemplate that this event actually happened.
As
James Holmes faces his judgment day, I can only wonder what the citizens of
Newtown, Connecticut would be preparing for. Holmes faces 166 counts, including murder and attempted murder. He
shot and killed 12 people, injuring 58 others. But Holmes will have his day in
court, as he has been ordered to stand trial. And hopefully, they will come out
with a death penalty conviction.
The
victims of Sandy Hook do not have this luxury. While we know a trial and
sentencing are not perfect and do not make up for the lives that were lost,
they do help provide some closure. There will be no impact statements, no words
from Robbie Parker, who lost his precious 6-year-old daughter
Emilie at the hands of a maniac. What would he say if he had a chance to speak
at Lanza's trial? I can only imagine that he would want the strictest
punishment available for the sake of his daughter. But in Connecticut, the strictest punishment Lanza would get would
be life in prison without the possibility of parole.
One
would have to believe this would incense the citizens of Connecticut: this
diabolical, rampage killer not having to pay with his life, and instead getting
to sit out the remainder of his days locked away, while their children and
teachers are dead. Their babies were slaughtered at school. Knowing what
they know now, would the state of Connecticut rethink its policies on the death
penalty? One would hope it would open their eyes to the need for severe, harsh
punishment.
No comments:
Post a Comment